Monthly Archive for July, 2010

Guest Post: The Family Trees of United and Continental

Thankfully, my good friend Court sent me a guest post last night. Which is awesome, since I didn’t have to write anything. Especially considering my travel this week, including a diversion that yielded a rare IAD-DCA flight on United.

Anyway – here it is:

Soon, we’ll be seeing more airline history bite the dust with the exit of the Continental name. I figured it was time to go back and trace the history of the two airlines. As cool as it is, I wish I could say I came up with the idea, but Delta managed to do this on their blog a while back. So as I get ready to say good bye to yet another historic airline brand, I salute Continental.

To Continental/Eastern/Texas International/People Express/Frontier/New York Air, whoever you are: We hardly knew ye.

United Airlines and Continental Airlines Family Tree

(Click image for a larger size you can actually read)

Some Oshkosh Pictures

I know, my little blog has been a bit neglected this week. But covering Oshkosh for Flightglobal has been both a fun and exhausting experience. Basically over the past three days the team here has gone to the airshow for stories, and then made an interactive magazine that evening. As you might expect, it takes awhile!

But fortunately this morning is a bit quiet and I can get back into all the airline news – and the was unfortunately some exciting stuff this week. I only say unfortunately because it means there’s more research for me to do. :D

So as I get back into the swing of things today – here are some of my favorite pictures from the week.











Trip Report: First Flight on United

Greetings to all from Oshkosh! I had a chance to explore the show a bit today and it’s simply amazing. Plane dork heaven.

I wanted to share my thoughts about my journey up here – which involved my first time ever flying United. Generally, I wait to write the trip report until I complete the flight back, but since it’ll be such a crazy week I figured I’d do it now. So here’s my best shot…

I started getting excited for this flight on Thursday. I was traveling with Jon Ostrower (better known as Flightblogger), and since he’s elite with United he’s eligible for upgrades – and ours cleared. I hadn’t flown in a non-economy seat in over ten years, so that was nice.

Fast forward to Saturday.

United Airlines Flight 607 (DCA-ORD)
Aircraft: Airbus A319, Malevolent Skies Colors
Seat: 1D
Pushback: 8:30 AM (5 minutes early)
Takeoff: 9:02 AM
Landing:  9:43 AM (-1 Hour)
Gate Arrival: 9:49 AM (5 minutes late)

I generally prefer taking the Metro to National since it’s cheap and relatively convenient. But because of the weekend schedule that wasn’t a viable option. So instead I booked a cab using the great Taxi Magic app for iPhone the prior evening.

Anyway, the cab showed up at 6am, and I arrived at DCA a few minutes after 6:30, and proceeded to receive my boarding pass at a kiosk with no line. Security was quick, despite getting randomly selected for my palms to get swabbed. I was at the gate by 6:50.

The gate area as already crowded, as the 7:45 am departure had been canceled and people were trying to get accommodated.
Unfortuantely, the agents couldn’t be much help, since they weren’t sure if a couple of future inbound flights to DCA would be canceled. Apparently the weather in Chicago on Friday was pretty rough.

When Jon checked in a bit after me, I found out our connecting flight to Appleton had been cancelled. Great. So I headed over to the gate agent who confirmed that we were on the standby list for the next available ORD-ATW flight (3:18pm).

Soon enough boarding started, and it was certainly nice to be one of the first people down the jetway. The purser quickly came with a tray of water and orange juice (I took the former). Boarding was pretty quick and we ended up pushing back five minutes early, according to United’s cargo website.

We then waited for takeoff for about 20 minutes. This is when I became a bit disappointed with our pilots – there wasn’t a peep from them. Not even a quick welcome aboard (unless I missed it). There wasn’t a mention of how long we were waiting for takeoff – just the required “flight attendants, please prepare for takeoff.” I was also a bit bummed that Channel 9 wasn’t turned on. I know it’s at the captain’s discretion, but it was just a feature I was looking forward to.

Anyway, the in-flight service started pretty quickly after takeoff. Since it’s been so long since I was last in first, I was very happy to have a well….actual glass. The warm banana nut muffins were also very tasty. The purser was really polite, and was checking on us at regular intervals to see we had what we needed.

As for the IFE, I was happy that one of my favorite episodes of 30 Rock was on. That wasn’t what was supposed to be on a westbound flight, however.

For the rest of the flight, I listened to the “Contemporary Pop” station, which mirrors the Top 40, basically. I was happy to hear that it was pretty up to date.

While I listened, I finally got some work done for school that had been looming over my head. I gotta say, this was my first time really
using the iPad for an extended time in flight, and I was pretty happy. I think I might still prefer a laptop, though, especially if there is
Wi-Fi.

Anyway, we begin our descent into ORD which was pretty bumpy for awhile. But looking out the window was fun, as there was a CRJ landing on the parallel runway, and having thrust reversers going on a wet runway always looks cool!

After our arrival, Jon and I headed over to F to see what our hopes were. The next flight, at 3:18, was overbooked and had 20 people on standby already. And if we couldn’t make that flight, the next one wasn’t until about 9pm.

Fortunately, Rod Rakic, founder of myTransponder, was driving from Chicago to Oshkosh, and became aware of our difficulties via Twitter. So we caught a cab downtown to meet up with him.

In the end, we arrived at the house we’re staying around 4:45pm.

Considering flight 6031 pushed back at ORD around the same time, which we may or may not have made, we did pretty well.

Plus, having a drive of three and a half straight hours of aviation talk makes the trip to Oshkosh pretty damn fun!

Overall, I was pretty pleased with United. Flying in First was definitely nice, and I hope it happens on ORD-DCA on the way back. But
since I’m not elite that won’t happen for me next time. In terms of service, I was pretty happy. The airport employees were all fine, but no one stood out. The purser in front was just great. For the flight crew, I had expected more. I mean, obviously, they did a fine job getting us there, but a quick “thanks for flying United today” really would have gone a long way.

Some Brief Thoughts On Earnings

Sorry for the lack of a post yesterday. Things here at Flightglobal have been awfully busy with a combination of Farnborough and US airline earnings. Which is a good thing – it’s been a great internship so far.

Also – thanks to everyone who read my post on my upcoming thesis. I got some great comments in private and here in the comments section. This is exactly why I wanted to start thinking about this early – so there’s plenty of time to consider ideas. I’ll be “married” to this work for over a year so I want to pick something good! But also, getting so many nice comments proves why I find the online aviation community to be so supportive.

So some quick thoughts on earnings so far. Every year I hope to tear apart each company’s earnings and play with the numbers, and then something always comes up. In this case its Oshkosh.

Anyway – we’ve seen great results from nearly everyone so far – in some cases the highest profits in ten years. In Delta’s case revenue projections aren’t as great as some analysts hope – but honestly, I think we can focus on the positive here.

The big phrase of the week seems to be “capacity restraint.” I think there’s a very valid concern that if one airline decides to build up capacity too much, the others will follow, just driving down yields disrupting the recovery. All the major network carriers appear to be saying that they are being careful with capacity, and have said that while capacity might be up year-over-year, it’s still much smaller than in 2007 and 2008.

As for the recovery – I don’t think anyone is calling this a boom. Instead words like “tepid” have been used. And I think it’s a fair assessment. Unemployment is worse than it was predicted it would be without the stimulus package, for example. Next Friday we’ll see the advance GDP estimate for the second quarter so maybe that will provide some insight.

For revenues – it seems growth might slow down a bit through the rest of this year into 2011. Personally, I think the fact that we’re going into harder comparisons explains a lot of this. Comps got easier and easier this year, but soon we’ll be comparing to part of 2009 when we hit bottom and turned around.

On a random note, some airlines were pretty giddy about some balance sheet moves. A couple of carriers have been paying down debt earlier and built up their cash balances. Hell, I heard one question on a call about cash being too expensive to hold. That’s kind of a nice turnaround compared to a few quarters ago.

But back to capacity – I really think most of the big players are going to be slow and steady here. Just look at the order book. AirTran deferred some deliveries as did Continental. Sure, American ordered more 737-800s but those are just replacing MD-80s. Frontier’s taking some A320s but retiring a few frames (still a net increase, though). On the other hand – Republic just ordered some E-190s (though it says they will at least in part be used to replace RJs) and Virgin America has 18 airplanes coming in the next year and a half.

So far, though, it seems that everyone is being cautious with capacity. And that’s a good thing. But for now, it’s great to see the best results we’ve seen in a long time.

So, I Have This Thesis…

To graduate with an honors degree from my school, I need to do a senior capstone project, which is basically a thesis. Later this year I need to select a topic and find a faculty sponsor. So I figure now is a good time to starting thinking about it. So, in a bit of a crowdsourcing experiment, I want to list a couple of ideas here. Let me know what you think, or if you have any ideas of your own. These are just totally rough ideas, and I haven’t really looked into how I would research them. Thanks in advance!

Airline Case Study

In the past I’ve seen a couple of students do case studies for their project, and I think writing one could be fun. Southwest and JetBlue’s success stories are pretty much standard business school fare by now, so I’d like to try to cover something more recent. Talking about the transition from Herb to Gary at Southwest could be interesting. So could something about Republic’s decision to acquire Midwest and Frontier.

Anti-Trust Immunity – Friend or Foe?

We’ve had some anti-trust immunity going on over the Atlantic for a few years now. I’d probably try to figure out if it has hurt consumers as all, and if the synergies that have been claimed by ATI partners have actually materialized. One weakness here is that I’d be relying on regional Form 41 data, which I hear isn’t always the best.

Fleet Commonality

Keeping an airline’s fleet simple has been hailed as a great way to reduce operating costs. And some airlines follow it very closely – like Southwest and Ryanair. I’d like to see what keeping a simple fleet does to the revenue side of things. For example, with the vast majority of Southwest’s fleet at 137 seats (there aren’t that many 737-500s, which seat 122), is the airline shut out of some smaller, but profitable, markets? Can they not service some larger destinations efficiently?

What Actually Drives Purchase Decision?

We, as passengers, love the frills. We all say we’d love seatback TVs and other features, but then get tempted away by lower fares. I’d like to see if extra features actually help airlines develop a revenue premium relative to competitors.

The Prestigious “Earlier than the Other Guys” Award

Well, it’s Monday, so here’s another great guest post from my friend Courtney!


…Well, it’s prestigious to me anyway. This week we award the first ever “Earlier than the Other Guys” performance award.

I want to take a look at the big beautiful on-time database the DOT puts out monthly. For data nerds such as myself, the 550,000 record database is a gold-mine of operational information. I won’t spill all my secrets on what I do with the data, (mostly because my company pays me to do those things and to specifically not tell you) but I do want to show you some of the recent fun I’ve had with it.

We’re usually made aware of the reports each month in the form of a press release issued by the DOT. May, 2010 was the latest, and as usual, Hawaiian was at the top and Comair at the bottom. Since the island airline would get the top accolades every month, it always drove me nuts to see that once again, the carrier operating in the best weather and least traffic posted the best on-time performance. The East Coast carriers are stuck in airports like JFK, ORD, and PHL, while Hawaiian is in…well…Hawaii.

Average delay per hour at New York JFK versus Honolulu

Of course we all know that JFK sees far more delays than HNL, and the graph above shows just that. As the shadows get long in the day, the delays grow at JFK, while in HNL there’s barely a blip. My quest this week was to strip away all of the location-dependent issues such as weather and ATC delays, and find out who really runs the sharpest operation.

My methodology was rather simple. I simply calculated the average delay at each airport for each hour of the day, and graded the airlines’ performance for each flight against that average. To dumb it down even further, I wanted to see how each airline performed against all of the other airlines regardless of where they flew.

Results of the "Earlier than the Other Guys" Award.

The results are in, and I was surprised to say the least. The winner? United Airlines. In fact on average, each of United Airlines’ flights had shorter arrival delays than the industry average by 8 minutes. Compare this with the bottom airline, Comair, whose flights arrived an average of 7 minutes after the industry average. That’s a 15 minute swing. Other airlines to note are Hawaiian, which still performed above average, but slipped to number 8, and Southwest, typically towards the top of the on-time statistics, slipping to number 13.

Earlier than the Other Guys Chart comparing all airlines on-time   performance on a level playing field While this does go a long way in leveling the playing field as we compare airlines’ performance, it is subject to some inaccuracies. I do take the effects of regionalization out by comparing to the average airlines operating at each airport, but the average delays are influenced by the airline we’re studying; such as with Delta in Atlanta. Nor does this account for the schedule padding we hear of in the industry.

To the passenger, this tells you that with United, you’ll arrive an average of 8 minutes before the rest of the industry. You should be in baggage claim by the time Comair shows up. Whether it’s schedule padding or not, it’s nice to see United most living up to their time commitments. Congratulations United on winning the first ever “Earlier than the Other Guys Award”. Might I suggest taking the non-stop 777 from ORD to HNL to rub it in?

Courtney is the co-creator of the Airplane Geeks Podcast, founder of AirlineEmpires.net, currently works for a commercial aircraft OEM, and is a self-proclaimed stud muffin. You can contact him through the Things in the Sky contact link.

US Airways Gets Creative to Go to São Paulo

US Airways has made no secret of the fact that it really, really, would like to serve São Paulo. Unfortunately, they haven’t been able to do so yet. The carrier received frequencies for Brazil service, but couldn’t use them due to capacity constraints at the airport there. So US Airways started up Charlotte to Rio instead.

But the airline certainly hasn’t given up on its quest to serve Brazil’s largest city. The slot swap with Delta was supposed to give US Airways access there, but the two airlines are currently challenging the FAA’s decision on that deal in court. (The two airlines were unhappy with the amount of slots they’d have to give up. They offered a compromise, but the FAA did not approve.)

So US Airways decided to get even more creative. If a deal with United gets approved by the DOT, it will be able to fly daily nonstop flights from Charlotte to São Paulo as early as January with 767-200s. How’d they do that?

United has 21 frequencies for Brazil flights. It uses 14 of those for São Paulo service from Dulles and O’Hare. The remaining seven are currently being used for seasonal flying from Dulles to Rio. So those seven would be temporarily (for a few years) given to US Airways. The two carriers are currently asking to have temporary reallocation last indefinitely until the they notify the DOT that the frequencies are going back to United, who says they’ll use them to expand Brazil service.

Meanwhile, United is planning to place its code on the new flight.

But this is some creative thinking from US Airways. If approved they can get access to a market they’ve been excited about for a couple of years now, and plus it can link their network to TAM’s.

Frontier’s Bag Promotion

Yesterday I saw on Facebook that Frontier had launched a new bag promotion, where the second checked bag now costs a whopping $1. No doubt that this is a welcome promotion for some travelers. But I’m trying to find the rationale behind this move.

I mean, Frontier’s not going to say goodbye to a huge amount of revenue – or at least I think that. Not everyone’s checking one bag, nevermind two. But that also makes me think it limits how many people will take advantage of this. Maybe once 3rd quarter 2010 data is out from the DOT (pretty far off) one can make a rough guess as to how many people participate.

But is this a shot just to attract passengers period? Is it a way to make Frontier look better compared to United, who charge  for both, and Southwest, who doesn’t charge for the first two bags?

Don’t get me wrong, this is nice, but I’m just trying to understand it a bit more. Meanwhile, the promotion is effective until September 6. You don’t need to do anything special – that’s the price for everyone.

Of course, elites and those who buy Classic and Classic Plus fares get two bags for free.

Some Interesting Cross-Fleeting with Delta

So, a friend mentioned to me last night that Delta was running A319s on the shuttle route from Boston to LaGuardia these days.  I did a bit of research, and it looks like they’ve been doing that for about a month now, putting A319s on six days a week and E-175s on the route for Saturdays.

Delta has historically had MD-80s on the route – so why make the change? I think this is a capacity play. If we look back to last summer, Delta was pulling about a 44% load factor on the route, meaning about 66 of the 142 seats on the aircraft were filled.  But if there was the same number of passengers on an A319 the load factor goes up to around 50%. The A319 also works from a product perspective now that the fleet has been equipped with Wi-Fi like the MD-80s.

But I don’t really get this move – why didn’t Delta get a bit more aggressive here?  Why not make the route a pure E-175 route like the other shuttle routes? The loads then would be in the high 80s. Would that be too little capacity for a couple of the peak flights? An E-175 would result in a loss of a couple of first class seats, would that tick off the elites?

Either way, this is just another interesting example of Delta utilizing the Northwest fleet.

What’s Left to Unbundle?

So let’s be honest here. It’s been a pretty damn boring week or so when it comes to airline news. Which means its time for one of my rambling posts.

We’ve seen very rapid unbundling over the past two years. I think it started in earnest during the spring and summer of 2008, with all of the legacies starting to charge for bags in some form. And we’ve seen airlines charge for plenty of extra things…whether it be new offerings or taking away things that were free. Here are some highlights:

  • Two free checked bags
  • Carry-on luggage
  • Meals and snacks
  • Television
  • Movies
  • Headsets
  • In-Flight Internet
  • Exit row/seats at the front of the airplane/seats with more legroom
  • Priority boarding/check-in/security
  • Additional mileage accrual

I guess my question is – what’s next? We’re basically to the point where an economy ticket just means your butt in the seat on many airlines. There’s little more than can be taken away – US Airways tried taking way free soft drinks but that didn’t work out too well.

I don’t give this list as a way to express discontent – I’m perfectly fine with unbundling. But how will the airlines continue to try to boost ancillary revenue streams? Of course they can raise fees but there’s only so much you can do there. What kind of innovations can we expect over the next few years?

Guest Post: The Top 5 Things You Should Know About Scope Clauses

Last week, my friend Courtney’s guest post got a lot of good feedback. So when he offered to write another one, I of course accepted. Enjoy!

For some reason unbeknownst to me, Dan didn’t kick me off his blog after my first post. So here I am, back again with another thrilling installment of that wacky industry we call airlines. This week I have an itch to talk about scope clauses. The more I read about our basic understanding of scope clauses, the more I grow confused as to how we even make money in this industry…oh wait…we don’t.

Regardless, I think it’s time to nail down what we don’t know (but should) about scope clauses. Since top 10 lists are a lazy man’s way to create interest on the net, and since I’m still too lazy to come up with 10, here are the top 5 things you should know about scope clauses.

1. Scope Clauses are Necessary

As long as we have unions in the airline industry, we’ll have scope clauses. Through all of the complicated topics we’ve heard about scope over the past 10 years, at a base level it is the heart of a union’s objective: to protect the jobs of its members. A scope clause simply defines what work will be the responsibility of the members of the union. Traditionally, they’re quite simple; “all flying under XYZ airlines will be handled by the pilots of ABC union.”
Lately, however, scope clauses have become known not for what falls inside the scope, but what is allowed outside. This is where it starts to get confusing. During what we old-timers call the “Good ‘Ol Days” it was easy to distinguish a major airline from a regional. To oversimplify, a regional airline flew small turboprops and a major flew large jets. But what happens when an economical small jet enters the picture? Mainline pilots don’t want to fly it because of the low pay rate required (among other not-so-rational reasons), so they allow an adjustment of their scope clause to allow the flying to be handled outside of the union council (an important distinction since it’s most likely that regional pilots from a different council but same union will be flying those aircraft).

Perhaps it’s easier if we consider how unions would exist without scope clauses. Short answer – they wouldn’t survive. Scope clauses are absolutely critical to unions. In order for you to protect your members’ jobs, you have to distinctly define what those members’ jobs are. Otherwise an airline could hire outside of the union, inevitably and effectively removing the union from the property. Not going to happen.

2. Scope Clauses Greatly Affect the Fleet Mix

Remember the DC-9, 737-200, 737-500, and F100? There was a time when legacy fleets were dominated by the 100-seat aircraft. Since then, Delta is parking the last of the DC-9-30/40’s, American has retired the F100, the 737-200 has left every U.S. fleet, and the 737-500 remains only at Southwest and Continental with both suggesting retirement. The replacement aircraft have been anything but successful at the U.S. majors with only US Airways flying the E190 (almost half of which have been sold to Republic) and the next smallest aircraft being United’s 120-seat A319’s. Essentially, the 100-seat fleet has been wiped out.

It doesn’t take much for us to guess why this 100-seat aircraft has gone the way of the dodo bird at the US majors: Scope Clauses. Quite simply, the unit costs of a 76-seat aircraft operated by the regionals are too close to that of a 100-seat aircraft operated by mainline. This has artificially created a seat gap between regional and mainline aircraft in which regionals can’t operate due to scope clauses, and mainline can’t operate because of the superior economics of the aircraft regionals that can operate. The graph to the left shows just how pronounced the seat gap is.

Scope clauses create an artificial gap between 80 and 120  seats.

3. Scope Relaxation is Largely Unpredictable

I know a lot of people think that since scope has crept up from 50 to 70 to 76 seats over the past 10 years that it’s going to continue. I’m not quite so convinced, and here’s why. Each relaxation to a scope clause is negotiated between an airline and its pilot union representatives. Among the scope clause relaxation issue are a whole slew of other issues which are arguably more important to a higher majority of the pilots, namely pay. All of these issues come together during the negotiating process, which is still subject to political pressure both within and outside the union, among other distractions. I often liken pilot negotiations to my wife going in to the grocery store to get milk, and coming back 45 minutes later with a $100 grocery bill, and no milk. Somewhere along the way, something else becomes more important, and the original objectives get set aside.
Also consider the special circumstances each of the airlines were in when they last relaxed scope. The first round as we’ll call it which allowed 50-seat jets, took place before anybody knew what the 50-seat jet would do. This involved almost every U.S. major airline including Continental, American, Delta, United, US Airways, and Northwest. The second major round of scope relaxation took place between 2002 and 2005, but was almost entirely exclusive to airlines in bankruptcy. Delta, United, Northwest, and US Airways all relaxed their scope to some extent, while American and Continental held there’s largely intact around the 50-seater (with the exception of a smallish fleet of 70-seaters at American). It’s important to point out that bankruptcy was a driving factor in determining which carriers significantly relaxed scope during the last round, and which did not. Since mergers and a (fingers crossed) improving economy are keeping the threat of major airline bankruptcy at bay, we really don’t have any good history to draw from when trying to predict what will happen next. All that being said, we sure do love to try, which leads me to…

4. Scope Clauses Hold Value

This is where I ignore the last section about not being able to predict scope clause relaxation and try to do precisely that. To oversimplify once more, the opportunity for a scope clause to be relaxed has a dollar figure attached to it. Airlines know roughly how much money they could save by relaxing the scope clause, and mainline pilot groups know how much they’d require in other concessions to allow it. This results in a phenomenon I call “there’s a price for everything.”

The next time any major airline meets with its pilots to negotiate a contract, the subject of scope relaxation will come up. During the past 10 years, we’ve seen the value of scope relaxation to the airlines equal the value of concessions made to the pilots. Hence, scope is relaxed. However, as regional pilot costs creep closer to mainline (or vice-versa), the value to the majors is diminishing. This, among other reasons, is lowering the value of incremental scope clause relaxations to the airlines. While the unions have become accustomed to airlines willingness to pay handsomely in terms of higher pay (or more recently less of a pay cut), airlines seem to have started to question the value of relaxing scope further. This forms the basis for my theory that we will not see any significant changes in scope during the next round of negotiations. Granted, this should cause the unions to “revalue” their scope clause which I think could inevitably lead to further relaxation after the current round. Of course there are wild cards thrown into the mix, such as American’s new union leadership who is promising more cooperation with management, and the United / Continental merger, which has already hit some labor snags.

5. Current Scope Clauses are Inherently Flawed

Before we jump into this, it’s common to hear that pure economics mean scope clauses shouldn’t exist. What we must remember is that we’re not dealing with pure economics. If a union were to allow economics to take total control, regional pilots (read lower paid pilots) would be flying everything up to 747’s, and mainline pilots would cease to exist. Hence, the argument that scope clauses should be subject to economics and nothing else also suggests that unions shouldn’t exist in airlines. As much as some may want that to be the case, we have to admit that unions are inevitable, as are scope clauses.

Much has been said about the pilot unions’ inability to square up to airline managements in terms of business strategy. The evolution of scope clauses makes this argument quite easy. We must point out, however that there are real economic forces at work influencing which aircraft are allowed with scope clauses. Assuming then the economic forces made scope clause relief inevitable (which is still up for debate), let us examine how the major union handled it.

ALPA is a national union made up of dozens of airlines’ pilots. The Delta and United pilots are represented under ALPA, the two groups we’ll examine. Also within the ALPA union are the pilots from the regional airlines who fly, with permission of the scope clause, for those carriers. Comair, ASA, and Freedom (Mesa) were ALPA carriers who flew regional aircraft for Delta during scope relaxation negotiations. Mesa, ACA, and Air Wisconsin all flew for United. What you’ll notice is the airlines I did not list who flew for those carriers: Skywest, Republic, and GoJet.

As ALPA mainline pilots renegotiated the scope clauses, they not only allowed regionals to fly incrementally larger jets, but they opened the door for non-ALPA regional pilots to grow at the expense of their ALPA counterparts. While the reasoning may not be clear, the effect is dramatic. Of the former ALPA regional airlines mentioned above, ACA is gone, Mesa is in bankruptcy, Comair is in critical condition, ASA is stagnant but owned by a non-union carrier, and Air Wisconsin had to buy their way out of United for survival, and now sits with an aging fleet at US Airways. The non-ALPA carriers? Skywest owns ASA and has already shown an appetite for Expressjet (another ALPA carrier), GoJet has recently signed an LOI for up to 100 MRJ’s and just bought Compass (an ALPA carrier), and Republic has bought everything else.

Therein lies the flaw. The degradation of the 100-seat mainline fleet has resulted in a substantial loss of union jobs. Even worse, the short-sided negotiations by ALPA have allowed almost complete erosion of their own union at the regional level. While they have airline-specific scope clauses, they lack a union-level scope clause. Which brings us back to the necessity of scope clauses; If you don’t define what work your union members do, how can you protect it?

If you decided to scan the headlines and pictures as I tend to and read just the last paragraph of a post, here’s what to take away.

  • Scope clauses will be here forever and ever, amen.
  • The current look of the industry has largely been influenced by scope clauses.
  • The factors driving the evolution of scope clauses are not always understood by the parties involved and therefore are irrational and flawed.

Courtney is the co-creator of the Airplane Geeks Podcast, founder of AirlineEmpires.net, currently works for a commercial aircraft OEM, and is a self-proclaimed stud muffin. You can contact him through the Things in the Sky contact link.